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Fedora 16 introduced chrony as default client time&date synchronization service: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/ChronyDefaultNTP Thus, there may be people already using chrony as their time and date synchronization service before installing IPA. However, installing IPA server or client on such machine may lead to unexpected behavior, as the IPA installer would configure ntpd and leave the machine with both ntpd and chronyd enabled. However, since the OS does not allow both chronyd and ntpd to be running concurrently and chronyd has the precedence, ntpd would not be run on that system at all. Make sure, that user is warned when trying to install IPA on such system and is given a possibility to either not to let IPA configure ntpd at all or to let the installer stop and disable chronyd. https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2974
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Code to be installed on any client that wants to be in an IPA domain. Mostly consists of a tool for Linux systems that will help configure the client so it will work properly in a kerberized environment. It also includes several ways to configure Firefox to do single sign-on. The two methods on the client side are: 1. globalsetup.sh. This modifies the global Firefox installation so that any profiles created will be pre-configured. 2. usersetup.sh. This will update a user's existing profile. The downside of #1 is that an rpm -V will return a failure. It will also need to be run with every update of Firefox. One a profile contains the proper preferences it will be unaffected by upgrades to Firefox. The downside of #2 is that every user would need to run this each time they create a new profile. There is a third, server-side method. See ipa-server/README for details.